Santa Fe Trail
PROGRAM
Summary
Program Preview
Video Tape
Credits
HISTORY
Introduction
A Castle on the Plains
Raton Pass
An Ancient Santa Fe Trail
Amache
Healing the Wounds
Exploring on Your Own
Further Down the Road
References
WAYSIDE EXCURSION
A History of the Santa Fe Trail
Manifest Destiny
Governor Carr
TRAVEL
Chambers/Visitor Centers
Weather/Road Conditions
Map
RESOURCES
Santa Fe Trail Timeline
America's Byways Timeline
Teacher's Guide
Japanese-Americans carry luggage in front of train
First Japanese-Americans arrive at Granada
Courtesy, Denver Public Library,
Western History Department
X-6562


Santa Fe Trail

Segment 5: Amache
Standards-Based Themes: Multicultural Influences, Settlement

Summary
When Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, anti-Japanese sentiment surfaced throughout the nation. President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 in 1942 to evacuate all people of Japanese ancestry who lived on the West Coast. Colorado Governor Ralph Carr welcomed the evacuees, unlike the governors of the other western states who vehemently refused to open their doors. Governor Carr stood firm in his belief that the rights of all Americans should be protected, no matter one’s place of origin. His willingness to stand up for what he believed probably cost him his political career when he lost a bid for the U.S. Senate by 3,000 votes.
Rows of barrack buildings in Granada
Amache Internment Camp from water tower
Courtesy, Denver Public Library,
Western History Department
X-6577
Hank Okubo lived with his family in Los Angeles. His father immigrated to the United States in 1914, 27 years before the Pearl Harbor attack. At age 13 he arrived at the Amache Internment Camp, located in Granada, Colorado, and there, with about 7,000 other internees, he and his family built a life. Today, former internees and their families return to Amache to pay tribute to those who endured. They also honor Japanese-American volunteer soldiers who died in service to our country.
Vocabulary
civil rights
concentration camp
evacuation
internee
Chief of Security and Japanese-American police staff
Chief of Internal Security Tomlinson and Amache police staff
Courtesy, Denver Public Library,
Western History Department
X-6563
Pre-Viewing Focus
  • What did the attack on Pearl Harbor mean for Japanese-Americans?
  • How was Governor Ralph Carr different from other governors?
  • How did Japanese-Americans make life in Amache similar to life outside the relocation camp?
  • How did some Japanese-Americans at Amache show their loyalty?
Post-Viewing Discussion
  • How are the Japanese-Americans of Amache an example of the will to survive?
  • What does it mean to put a principle above your own survival? How did Ralph Carr do this? Would you have the courage to go against a popular trend and stand by a personal decision?
Governor Carr: “Person of the Century” >
HIGHLIGHTS

Weathered Amache sign
Amache Internment Camp in Granada, Colorado
Great Divide Pictures LLC

1942
Ten internment camps are constructed, including one near the Santa Fe Trail in southeastern Colorado.


Japanese-Americans board buses in Granada
Granada
Courtesy, Denver Public Library, Western History Department, X-6560

Japanese-American evacuees arriving at the Granada Railroad Station during World War II.


Barbed wire close-up
Barbed wire at Amache
Great Divide Pictures LLC

Amache grows into the tenth largest town in Colorado, with a population of more than 7,000.


Boys with bicycle in front of barrack building
Amache Internment Camp
Courtesy, Denver Public Library, Western History Department, X-6559

Typical barracks building


Blue wild flower with golden center
Wild flower
Great Divide Pictures LLC

Today at Amache, flowers find footholds in the cracked cement foundations. The remains of Amache serve as a poignant reminder that freedom is the right of every American.


Amache monument with U. S. flag
Amache remembered
Great Divide Pictures LLC

Every year groups of former internees and their children come here to pay tribute and remember. A monument honors the Japanese-American soldiers who died fighting for freedom.
Rocky Mountain PBS


Copyright © Rocky Mountain Public Broadcasting Network, Inc. All rights reserved.